Founded on sound fiscal and budgetary measures, ensconced within the frame work of the Constitution and a smattering of The Declaration, the Tea Party seems to have exhausted its shelf life. It has gone the way of a Ross Perot bumper sticker.

The basic principles that the Tea Party were founded upon, however, have not gone away. Living within one’s budget, acquiring what is important and what is not, spending only what you take in and saving for a rainy day is as sound today as it was when it was reintroduced by the radical tea partiers. First introduced by the radical Founding Father, Benjamin Franklin.

Individuals who adhere to these principles personally are considered financially savvy and tuned in to the foundation for financial success and not considered radicals.

Politicians, however, have recently discovered that sound budgetary policies don’t play well in Des Moines, Manchester or Columbia.

Of course, Paul Ryan, Speaker of the House, is not running and simply opens up the checkbook and spends ad infinitum. Sequester? A bad word from the past “Let’s all do lunch”.

How quickly we have forgotten how governmental spending has spiraled out of control. The finger pointing at George Bush and Barack Obama for accumulating trillions of dollars of debt seems to have become ominously forgotten.

It’s an election year and all that matters is getting elected. No matter what you have to say or promise or how you will pay for it. Just win!

Of course, the mass will buy-in as long as it’s perceived to be free and the money continues to be printed. The sad part is that every politician running for President is also buying-in and have the same belief.